
In between running up monstrous bar tabs and
guzzling moonshine, they found time to make us laugh. MDM salutes
the best of the primetime hoochers.
Otis
Campbell
The Andy Griffith Show
Mayberry’s
loveable town drunk was so functional he locked himself up every time
he got loaded. Even teetotaling Sheriff Andy Taylor possessed an appreciation
of Otis’ sponge-like ability to absorb alcohol: “In a
way that drinking does a good service for the town. Otis laps it up
so fast other folks can’t get to it.” Otis was happy go
lucky, always kind and ever loyal—he never ratted out a moonshiner,
even when hypnotized by arch-enemy Deputy Barney Fife. Though he was
sometimes chased by pink elephants, rode cows and mistook goats for
uncles, he was trustworthy enough for Barney to swear him in as a
deputy, setting off this hilarious exchange:
Barney: I will be alert at
all times.
Otis: I will be alert at all times. 
Barney: I will try to look like a deputy and act
like a deputy.
Otis: I will try to look like a deputy and act like
a deputy.
Barney: I will at no time while wearing the uniform
take a drink.
Otis: I will try to look like a deputy and act like
a deputy.
The Usual: Moonshine (Mayberry
was in dry county.)
Why So Much: Living in a dry county depressed him.
Trivia: Of all the central male characters on the
Andy Griffith show, only Otis was married (perhaps that’s why
he drank so much.)
Best Lines: “I’ve got a hobby—drinking.”
“You’re right. I am a killer. I just killed a whole pint.”
Barney
Gumble
The Simpsons
So he eats peanuts out of dumpsters and drinks
beer out of ashtrays—that doesn’t mean he’s a bum.
Okay, he is a bum, but a talented one. He sings like Niall Donoghue,
shrugs off a snootfuls of mace, directed and starred in an award-winning
short film (Pukahontas), dated Linda Rondstadt, ruled the snow plow
business with a shaky fist as the Plow King,
and
makes one hell of a two-cheese omelet.
Not to mention brave: he rescued Moe and Homer
(and a couple cases of Duff) from a burning bar, and nearly made it
into space (he was waylaid by non-alcoholic champagne). Barney actually
swore off the booze for awhile, prompted by a videotape of him in
drag, sucking spilled beer from the carpet. But hey, it was his birthday.
All in all he’s a great pal to drink with—just don’t
leave him alone with your beer.
.
The Usual: Duff Beer, but he’s not picky. If it’s
got alcohol in it, Barney’s all over it.
Why So Much: Homer got him hooked in high school.
Trivia: Barney’s bar tab at Moe’s is
fourteen billion dollars and growing. Moe got NASA to calculate it.
Best Line: “I’m concerned about our beer
supply. After this case, and the next case, we only have one case
left.”
Norm
Peterson
Cheers
Norm had a fine understanding of his place
in the world—the stool at the end of the bar. He never met a
beer he didn’t drink and refused to let his lack of gainful
employment get in the way of a good drunk—by the time the show
went off the air his bar tab was sometimes mistaken for a phone book.
The Usual: Free beer
Why So Much: Fear of work, wife Vera.
Trivia: The reason Norm dropped out of the Knights
of the Scimitar, a men’s club that would have vastly advanced
his social station? Their meetings were alcohol free.
Best Lines: Norm’s responses to the bartender’s
daily greetings have become the stuff of legend. Here’s a sample:
“How’s a beer sound, Norm?”
“I dunno. I usually finish them before they get a word in.”
“What would you say to a nice beer, Normie?”
“Going Down?”
“What’s new, Normie?”
“Terrorists, Sam. They’ve taken over my stomach and they’re
demanding beer.”
“What would you say to a beer, Normie?”
“Daddy wuvs you.”
“What do you say, Norm?”
“Any cheap, tawdry thing that will get me a beer.”
“What’s the story, Mr. Peterson?”
“The Bobsey Twins Go To The Brewery. Let’s cut to the
happy ending.”
“How’s it going, Mr. Peterson?”
“Poor.”
“I’m sorry to hear that.”
“No, I mean pour.”
“Pour you a beer, Mr. Peterson?”
“Alright, but stop me at one....make that one-thirty.”
“What’s the story, Norm?”
“Boy meets beer. Boy drinks beer. Boy meets another beer.”
“Can I pour you a beer, Mr. Peterson?”
“A little early, isn’t it, Woody?”
“For a beer?”
“No, for stupid questions.”
Carlton
the Doorman
Rhoda
“Hello, this is Cartlon, your doorman
. . . “ Never seen but often heard slurring over Rhoda Morgenstern’s
apartment’s intercom, Carlton drew the show’s biggest
laughs and also apparently drank continuously because he sounded legless
from dawn to dusk. Surly and always on the mooch, the only thing that
motivated
him
into doing anything resembling physical labor was the promise of money
for more booze.
The Usual: Vodka, ripple
and plenty of it.
Why So Much: Didn’t care much for his job.
Carlton perceived that happiness is achieved by fulfilling one’s
goals and if one sets them low enough, happiness is assured.
Trivia: The Carlton character developed a huge following
and fans sometimes sent in fan club membership cards scented with
ripple.
Best Scene: Rhoda’s visiting mother exclaims:
“There’s a drunk in the lobby, you’d better tell
the doorman.” Rhoda replies, “Ma, that is the doorman.”
Homer
Simpson
The Simpsons
The balder half of Springfield’s power-drinking
duo, Homer may not put it away like Barney but his steady pace would
wear down a street wino. He began his love affair with beer when he
bought his first six pack at the age of 17 with a fake ID (the name
on the ID was Brian McGee and he stayed up all night drinking beer
and listening to Queen.) Though some detractors will tell you he is
lazy and unkind, his ambition knew no bounds when Springfield went
dry and he emerged as the Beer Baron, the town’s most industrious
bootlegger. And he’s kind enough to buy minors beers and forgive
Moe for stealing his Flaming Homer cocktail recipe. Though not the
best of parents, (he once stole Bart’s piggy bank to buy beer)
he is chock full of good advice for his son,
including
these three gems:
“Now son, you don’t want to
drink beer. That’s for Daddies, and kids with fake IDs.”
“Son, when you participate in sporting
events, it’s not whether you win or loose, it’s how drunk
you get.”
“A woman is a lot like beer. They
smell good, they look good, and you’d step over your own mother
to get one.”
The Usual: Duff beer, but
is also prepared to drink fifteen-year-old Billy Beer, Jello shots,
wine (homemade and store-bought) and SkittleBrau (a Skittles and Duff
cocktail he literally dreamed up).
Why So Much: Stifling job, blue-haired wife, demonic
son.
Trivia: After promising Marge to quit drinking beer
for a month, he became so desperate he snuck into a football stadium
and ate the dirt beneath the bleachers.
Best Line: “Marge, I’m going to Moe’s.
Send the kids to the neighbors, I’m coming back loaded!”
Karen
Walker
Will and Grace
The foremost of TV’s new generation of
female lushes, this millionairess drinks vodka martinis for breakfast
and will have a fifth in her veins by lunch. Fast on her feet, ultra-confident
and armed with a very sharp tongue, she blames what few mistakes she
made on temporary sobriety.
The Usual: “Martini,
honey, and don’t waste any space with those olives.”
Why So Much: Her husband’s in prison, she’s
rich, she’s thirsty.
Trivia: She keeps chilled Stoli in her lunch thermos.
Best Lines: “Honey, I could suck the alcohol
out of a deodorant stick”
“What can I do? How can I help?
What are we drinking?”
“That’s like saying Pradas
are just shoes or vodka is just a morning beverage.”
Karen: (throwing down her
cards) Gin.
Will: We’re playing poker.
Karen: I know what we’re playing, I was ordering.
Now come on, Mama’s dry!
Granny
(Daisy May Moses)
Beverly Hillbillies
When the newly-rich Clampetts decided to leave
the Missouri Ozarks for the Hills of Beverly, the first thing they
loaded on the truck was probably Granny’s still. The iron monstrosity
(which sometimes exploded) found a new home next to the cee-ment pond
and immediately went into production, distilling Granny’s private
stock of ‘rheumatiz medicine’. When pressed, she’d
admit her homemade hooch didn’t actually cure rheumatism, but
would “make ya happy ya got it!” Jed and Jethro were not
averse to having an occasional nip but Granny took to it like a Tennessee
hog to Kentucky mash. Every time I watch that crazy little hillbilly
woman throw that ceramic jug onto her shoulder and take a long backwoods
pull, well, I just want to kiss her . . . granddaughter Elly May.
The Usual: Moonshine, a.k.a White Lightnin (“cuz it gets in
your bloodstream twice as fast”) Mountain Dew, Corn Squeezins,
Tennessee Tranquilizer, Possum Ridge Penicillin, Possum Ridge Paralyzer,
Smokey Mountain Skullbuster and Smokey Mountain Soothing Syrup.
Why So Much: Rheumatizm, homesickness, critter trouble.
Trivia: Elly May’s pet bear Fairchild had a weakness for booze
and drank almost as much as granny did.
Best Line: According to Granny, a proper batch of moonshine “charred
the tongue, made your eyeballs spin and locked your elbows.”
Pass me the jug.
Fred
Sanford
Sanford and Son
After a hard day of not doing much at all,
junk dealer Fred would work up a powerful thirst for the soothing
respite of, oh yes, ripple. Sometimes he wouldn’t wait until
the end of the day, especially if his drinking pals Grady and Woodrow
dropped in. And could you blame him? His wife was dead, his son was
a big dummy and his ultra-religious sister-in-law Esther had a habit
of dropping in unannounced. A born mixologist, Fred found his drink
of choice mixed well with a variety of unlikely beverages (see below).
The Usual: Thunderbird (a.k.a. “Ole Faithful”)
and ripple, sometimes straight, sometimes
mixed:
Mintchipple (Mint julep + Ripple)
Cripple (Cream + Ripple)
Champipple (Champagne + Ripple)
Beaujolipple (Beaujolais + Ripple)
Manischipple (Manischewitz + Ripple).
Why So Much: He owned a junkyard. It kinda comes
with the job.
Trivia: You can buy Fred Sanford T-Shirts with “How
‘bout a bottle of Ripple?” on the back.
Best Line: Fred having his weekly “big
one” (that’s a heart-attack for you kids): “Oh,
d’is da big one, Lamont! ‘Lizbeth, ah’m comin’
to join ya, honey! Wif’ a bottle of ripple, an’ an ol’
toothbrush!”
Nina Van Horn
Just Shoot Me
A fading model on the downside of forty, Nina
discovered early on vodka made the long cruel slide easier to bear.
Blind men sometimes mistake her for an open bottle of vodka, but that
bothers her less than strangers unwilling to pick up her immense lunchtime
martini tabs. For Nina, her job isn’t so much a refuge from
drinking as it is a place to sneak drinks. She catches a lot of flak
for the uninterrupted stream of vodka flowing into her veins, but
the beauty of being drunk is you don’t have to care.
The Usual: Vodka martinis, vodka and tonic, vodka
and vodka.
Why So Much: To make it easier for the mirror to
lie.
Trivia: Nina hides a bottle of vodka in the elevator
call box.
Best Line: Nina discussing a magazine layout:
“Perfect. An article on aging next to an ad for vodka. Problem.
Solution.”
Dr.
Benjamin “Hawkeye” Pierce
M*A*S*H
When he wasn’t in the operating room
repairing shattered soldiers, he was drowning his misery with moonshine
martinis in the officer’s tent (the
Swamp)
or Rosie’s Bar. The moonshine sprang forth from the Swamp’s
still, which Hawkeye referred to as “The Wellspring of Life”.
Built by Trapper John out of medical equipment, the still always seemed
full of high-proof liquor, despite the fact we never saw them fire
it up for production. Since the MASH doctors never knew when the wounded
would arrive, it’s a good bet Hawkeye, Trapper and the thoroughly
inebriate Colonel Blake were at least half in the bag most of the
time they operated.
The Usual: Moonshine martini,
Sahara dry, with one black-market olive.
Why So Much: He was a pacifist stuck in the middle
of a war.
Trivia: The still had to be rebuilt twice: once when
a vengeful Frank Burns smashed it, and again when B.J Hunicutt took
out his frustrations after Radar bailed out of the war.
Best Line: Hawkeye orders a cocktail at Rosie’s:
“I’d like a dry martini, Mr. Quoc, a very dry martini.
A very dry, arid, barren, desiccated, veritable dustbowl of a martini.
I want a martini that could be declared a disaster area. Mix me just
such a martini.” —FKR
¸